January 2018 Archive
901.
Our Ambitious Plan to Make Insecure PHP Software a Thing of the Past (paragonie.com)
902.
I am a roboticist in a cheese factory (blogs.scientificamerican.com)
903.
CPU hardware vulnerable to side-channel attacks (kb.cert.org)
904.
Proof of burn: An alternative method for distributed consensus (en.bitcoin.it)
905.
With Fungi in the Mix, Concrete Can Fill Its Own Cracks (smithsonianmag.com)
906.
Xen Project Spectre/Meltdown FAQ (blog.xenproject.org)
907.
Do or undo – there is no VACUUM (rhaas.blogspot.com)
908.
Classical Data Structures That Can Outperform Learned Indexes (dawn.cs.stanford.edu)
909.
Generative Adversarial Networks Code in PyTorch and Tensorflow (github.com)
910.
The Future of Transmit iOS (panic.com)
911.
America’s Fastest Spy Plane May Be Back and Hypersonic (bloomberg.com)
912.
What's behind rich people pretending to be self-made? (theguardian.com)
913.
Teslasuit – full body haptic VR suit (teslasuit.io)
914.
Ask HN: As an adult introvertish nerd what makes you happy?
915.
Sleep and Mortality: A Population-Based 22-Year Follow-Up Study (2007) (fermatslibrary.com)
916.
Rubbish (2002) (wweek.com)
917.
Meltdown and Spectre: Bugs in modern computers leak passwords and sensitive data (meltdownattack.com)
918.
U.S. To End Policy That Let Legal Pot Flourish (bloomberg.com)
919.
Founders Fund Makes Bet on Bitcoin (wsj.com)
920.
Some thoughts on security after ten years of Qmail 1.0 (blog.acolyer.org)
921.
Why we wrote our Kafka Client in Pony (blog.wallaroolabs.com)
922.
The cost of games (raphkoster.com)
923.
An 8-tube module from a 1954 IBM 705 mainframe: it's a key debouncer (righto.com)
924.
How a 22-Year-Old Discovered Meltdown and Spectre (bloomberg.com)
925.
Don't Be Evil: Utopias, Frontiers, and Brogrammers (logicmag.io)
926.
Tensorflow 1.5.0 (github.com)
927.
Data structure and algorithms problems in C++ (github.com)
928.
Teenagers now better behaved and less hedonistic but lonelier and more isolated (economist.com)
929.
How Slack Stays Secure During Hyper Growth (heavybit.com)
930.
Why Understanding Space Is So Hard (2016) (nautil.us)